Posts

Image
  Navigated Menu Back Financial Times Financial Times UK 18 Apr 2026 Buttons.Search Options The food crisis to come Hun­ger and even fam­ine are fore­see­able con­sequences of the war on Iran. Now the world must act to shield the poorest from effects that will con­tinue long after the fight­ing stops, argues Adam Hanieh Saudi Ara­bia, Qatar and the UAE have come to occupy a fa Settings Translate Article Print Share Listen Few 20th-cen­tury trans­form­a­tions did more to remake the world than the “Green Revolu­tion”. From the 1950s onwards, new high-yield­ing crop vari­et­ies, syn­thetic fer­til­isers, chem­ical pesti­cides and large-scale irrig­a­tion drove a sharp increase in the out­put of staple crops such as wheat and rice. In its more cel­eb­rat­ory accounts, this trans­form­a­tion pushed back fam­ine and helped sup­port rapid pop­u­la­tion growth across much of Asia and Latin Amer­ica. India, one of the key centres of the Green Revolu­tion, more than doubled wheat pro­duc­tio...